Driving difficulties in Parkinson's disease.

Author(s)
Rizzo, M. Uc, E.Y. Dawson, J. Anderson, S. & Rodnitzky, R.
Year
Abstract

Safe driving requires the coordination of attention, perception, memory, motor and executive functions (including decision-making) and self-awareness. Parkinson's disease and other disorders may impair these abilities. Because age or medical diagnosis alone is often an unreliable criterion for licensure, decisions on fitness to drive should be based on empirical observations of performance. Linkages between cognitive abilities measured by neuropsychological tasks, and driving behavior assessed using driving simulators, and natural and naturalistic observations in instrumented vehicles, can help standardize the assessment of fitness-to-drive. By understanding the patterns of driver safety errors that cause crashes, it may be possible to design interventions to reduce these errors and injuries and increase mobility. This includes driver performance monitoring devices, collision alerting and warning systems, road design, and graded licensure strategies. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
C 47435 [electronic version only]
Source

Movement Disorders, Vol. 25 (2010), Special Issue: Frontiers of Science and Clinical Advances in Quality of Life in Parkinson's Disease, p. S136-S140, 27 ref.

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.